Nursing professor funded for dementia care study
College of Nursing professor Dr. Genevieve Thompson recently received $750,000 in funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) for a three-year study to support communication and decision-making for family caregivers of people living with dementia.
The study, Moving upstream: Integrating a palliative approach into dementia care, will involve up to eight long-term care homes in New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, as well as Alzheimer’s Society members in those provinces and Alberta.
Thompson, who holds a UM research chair in person-directed living, supported through Riverview Health Centre and the College of Nursing at the Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, said the study will ensure early conversations about the nature and progression of dementia, defining essential decision-making points and discussions about changing care needs as the disease progresses.
She said that within the long-term care environment, these discussions often occur late, both in terms of the stage of illness and proximity to death.
Thompson said pilot work and randomized controlled trials found that the SPA-LTC program decreased emergency visits in the months leading up to a person’s death.
“It provides care that coincides with the wishes and goals of residents, improved family care partner experience, and grief and bereavement support along with staff feeling more empowered in the provision of a palliative approach to care.”
Components of the project will include the development of “champions” in each of the settings – people who are already seen as go-to contacts and who are comfortable talking about palliative approaches – education, family meetings and the distribution of illness-specific pamphlets and other materials.
“We’re also developing a comfort care booklet with options for a person living with advanced dementia. It will provide care options and opportunities to actively participate in decision-making.”
Thompson hopes the program will be picked up nationally following the three-year study. She would like to see a dementia-specific portal on the SPA-LTC website.
“We’ve had buy-in from Alzheimer’s Canada to say this is a really important topic and project, so we could develop a model with this toolkit that other coordinators could then use.
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